Preface.- Acknowledgments.- Part I: Introduction.- Chapter 1 The Constitutive Nature of Rules.- Chapter 2 The Normative/Descriptive Distinction in Methodologies of Business Ethics.- Chapter 3 A Theory of Moral Rights.- Chapter 4 The Compatibility of Freedom, Equality, and a Communitarian Notion of the Self.- Part II: Mental Models and Moral Imagination.- Chapter 5 Moral Imagination and the Search for Ethical Decision Making in Management.- Chapter 6 Moral Motivation Across Ethical Theories: What Can We Learn for Designing Corporate Ethics Programs? with Simone de Colle.- Chapter 7 The role of mental models in social construction with Laura Hartman, Crina Archer, Elaine Englehardt and Michael Pritchard.- Chapter 8 Globalization, mental models and decentering stakeholder approaches.- Chapter 9 Social Constructivism, Mental Models, and the Problem of Obedience with L.P. Hartman, D. Moberg, E. Englehardt, M. Pritchard, and B. Parmar.- Chapter 10 Human Rights as Social Constructions with Thomas E. Wren.- Part III: Systems Thinking.- Chapter 11 Mental Models, Moral Imagination and Systems Thinking in the Age of Globalization.- Chapter 12 Business Ethics, Organization Ethics, and Systems Ethics for Health Care.- Chapter 13 Women Leaders in a Globalized World.- Chapter 14 Building Partnerships to Create Social and Economic Value at the Base of the Global Development Pyramid with J.M. Calton, L.P. Hartman, and D. Bevan.- Part IV: Adam Smith's Contributions to Business Ethics.- Chapter 15 The role of self-interest in Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations.- Chapter 16 Freedom, commodification, and the alienation of labor in Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations.- Chapter 17 Business Ethics and the Origins of Contemporary Capitalism: Economics and Ethics in the Work of Adam Smith and Herbert Spencer.- Chapter 18 The Inexorable Sociality of Commerce: The Individual and Others in Adam Smith with D. Bevan.- Part V: Big Questions in Business Ethics.- Chapter 19 The Rashomon Effect.- Chapter 20 The principle of double effect and moral risk: some case studies of US transnational corporations.- Chapter 21 Obstacles to ethical decision-making in the perception of ethical context with Laura Hartman, Crina Archer, Elaine Englehardt and Michael Pritchard.- Chapter 22 The Moral Responsibility of Multinational Corporations to Be Socially Responsible.- Chapter 23 Trust after the Global Financial Meltdown with L. Hartman, C. Archer, D. Bevan and K. Clark.- Chapter 24 Employment-at-Will, Employee Rights, and Future Directions for Employment with T.J. Radin.- Chapter 25 Corporate Moral Agency and the Responsibility to Respect Human Rights in the UN Guiding Principles: Do Corporations have Moral Rights?.- References.
About the Author: David Bevan has a PhD in Management for King's College London (2007), he has serve the faculties of Royal Holloway University of London, HEC Paris, Université Libre de Bruxelles, and CEIBS in the fields of Applied Ethics and Strategy. Bevan writes and researches on Business Ethics, Leadership, Marketing, Economics as affected by Continental and Process Philosophy. He has been a regular collaborator with Patricia Werhane since 2008. In addition to academic interests he consults with SMEs and large international firms on strategic leadership and environmental, social and governance risk management
Regina Wentzel Wolfe, Ph.D. is Associate Professor of Theological Ethics at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, Illinois. She is also a Senior Wicklander Fellow, Institute for Business and Professional Ethics at DePaul University. She was Christopher Chair in Business Ethics in the Brennan School of Business Dominican University, River Forest, Illinois. Prior to that, she was Associate Professor of Theology at Saint John's University Collegeville, Minnesota. Wolfe has worked in the fields of market research and economic research and forecasting and was on the editorial staff of The Tablet, based in London, England. She is co-editor of Ethics and World Religions: Cross-cultural Case Studies. She was editor of the Society for Business Ethics Newsletter and Executive Director of the Society of Christian Ethics. Wolfe holds a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from McDonough School of Business Georgetown University, a Master in Theology and Ministry from Loyola University Chicago, and a Ph.D. from King's College University of London.
Patricia H. Werhane is the Wicklander Chair of Business Ethics and Managing Director, Institute for Business and Professional Ethics at DePaul University and Professor Emerita at the Darden School of Business, University of Virginia where she was the Peter and Adeline Ruffin Chair of Business Ethics and Senior Fellow at the Olsson Center for Applied Ethics. Until 1993 she was the Henry J. Wirtenberger Professor of Business Ethics at Loyola University of Chicago. She received her B.A. from Wellesley College, and M.A. and Ph.D. from Northwestern University
Professor Werhane is a founding member and past president of the Society of Business Ethics, past president of the American Society for Value Inquiry, and past president of the International Society for Business, Economics and Ethics. She is also a member of the Academy of Management, the European Business Ethics Network, the American Philosophical Association, the International Society for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy, and the Society for Philosophy and Public Affairs. She has been a Rockefeller Fellow at Dartmouth, Andersen Professor at the University of Cambridge, and Erskine Visiting Fellow at the University of Canterbury (New Zealand), Fulbright Specialist at All Hallows College Dublin Ireland and Visiting Scholar at Royal Holloway University of London and St. Thomas University Minneapolis.
Professor Patricia Werhane is the author or editor of over twenty-five books including Ethical Issues in Business, edited with Tom Donaldson eighth edition, Persons, Rights, and Corporations, Adam Smith and His Legacy for Modern Capitalism, and Moral Imagination and Managerial Decision-Making, published by Oxford University Press. Her work, Profitable Partnerships for Poverty Alleviation with Laura Hartman, Dennis Moberg and Scott Kelley, focuses on globalization, with an emphasis on developing new models for corporate governance and corporate initiatives to alleviate poverty both in the United States and in less developed countries around the world. Written with co-authors, Corporate Responsibility: An American Experience traces the historical foundations of corporate responsibility in the United States and won the SIM Academy of Management Book Award for 2014. Her latest book, with Hartman, Archer, Englehardt and Pritchard, is Obstacles of Ethical Decision-Making published ate Cambridge University Press.
She has written over 100 published articles, case studies, and book chapters on various business ethics on such topics as employee and employer rights, mergers and acquisitions, responsibilities of multinational corporations, intellectual property, and the intersection between healthcare organizations and business ethics. Professor Werhane serves on the editorial boards of a number of journals and she is founder and former editor-in-chief of Business Ethics Quarterly, the journal of the Society for Business Ethics. She is also on the academic advisory committee in the Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethics. In 2008 she was listed as one of the 100 most influential people in business ethics by Ethisphere Magazine.